September 11,
1990
-- President George Bush [Senior] gives a speech to a joint session
of the U.S. Congress entitled, "Toward A New World Order".
July 12, 2001
-- A full two months before the
September 11 attack, a Russian expert, Tatyana Koryagina, "a
senior research fellow in the Institute of Macroeconomic
Researches subordinated to Russian Ministry of Economic
Development", warned of an attack in America: "Besides bombs
and missiles, there are other kinds of weaponry, much more
destructive ones. . . . The U.S. is engaged in a mortal
economic game … There is a shadow economy, shadow politics and
also a shadow history, known to conspirologists. There are
(unseen) forces acting in the world, unstoppable for (most
powerful) countries and even continents. There are
international, 'super-state' and 'super-government' groups. In
accordance with tradition, the mystical and religious
components play extremely important roles in human history.
One must take into account the shadow economy, shadow politics
and the religious component, while predicting the development
of the present financial situation. Shadow financial
activities of $300 trillion are hanging over the planet. At
any moment, they could fall on any stock exchange and cause
panic and crash... The U.S. has been
chosen as the object of financial attack because the financial
center of the planet is located there. The effect will be
maximal. The strike waves of economic crisis will spread over
the planet instantly, and will remind us of the blast of a
huge nuclear bomb." This speech has proven prescient, given the state of the global economy in 2009.
September 11, 2001
-- Eleven years to the day after President Bush's speech,
the World Trade Center and the Pentagon are
attacked.
September 13, 2001
-- Deputy Defense Secretary Paul
Wolfowitz says the retaliation would be continued until the
roots of terrorism are destroyed. 'These people try to
hide. They won't be able to hide forever ... They think
their harbors are safe, but they won't be safe forever ...
it's not simply a matter of capturing people and holding
them accountable, but removing the sanctuaries, removing the
support systems, ending states who sponsor terrorism.'
October 11, 2001
-- Tom Brokaw announces the world now has formed into the
New World Order.
October 26, 2001
-- President Bush signs legislation into law that gives
Federal Government dictatorial powers and severely -- if not
fatally -- erodes individual liberties and rights.
November 2001 -- January 2002
- Bush foreign policy and security advisers, including
Richard Perle, Paul Wolfowitz, and Condoleeza Rice, say
Saddam poses the greatest danger to the U.S. and should be
the next target in the war on terrorism. Unnamed diplomatic
and Pentagon sources say through press reports that the CIA
and Defense Department are making plans for an Iraqi
military campaign. The president remarks that Saddam will
"find out" the consequences of refusing to allow United
Nations weapons inspectors to return to Iraq. [Sources:
Washington Times, USA Today, New York Times and the
Observer (U.K.)]
Dec. 5, 2001
-- Members of Congress John McCain, Richard Shelby, Jesse
Helms, Henry Hyde, Harold Ford Jr., Joseph Lieberman, Trent
Lott, Benjamin Gilman, and Sam Brownback send President Bush
a letter urging military action against Iraq.
January 29, 2002
-- Bush, in his State of the Union Address, lists Iraq, Iran
and North Korea as constituting an 'axis of evil, arming to
threaten the peace of the world. By seeking weapons of mass
destruction, these regimes pose a grave and growing danger'.
February 2002 -- Vice President Dick
Cheney prepares to visit the Middle Eastern nations of Saudi
Arabia, Jordan, Turkey, and Kuwait, all of which border
Iraq. On Cheney's trip Bush remarks, "There's nothing like
looking somebody in the eye and letting them know that when
we say we're going to fight terror, we mean it." Also in
February on a trip to Japan, Bush reportedly tells the
Japanese prime minister "We'll attack Iraq. We'll do it
definitely."[Sources: The Guardian (U.K.), Kyodo News]
March 11-13, 2002 --As Cheney travels on his
Middle East trip, the leaders of Turkey and Jordan, two
scheduled stops on the vice president's travel agenda, warn
a U.S. attack on Iraq could destabilize the region. Cheney
first arrives in London, where British Prime Minister Tony
Blair pledges support for expanding America's war against
terrorism to other nations. Jordan's King Abdullah meets
with Cheney and states publicly that he does not support a
U.S. strike against Iraq. [Source: Washington Post]
March 14, 2002
-- President Bush gives his first press conference since
9-11 and says, "all options are on the table," including
nuclear weapons, to confront states that threaten to use
weapons of mass destruction. Saddam Hussein "is a problem,
and we're going to deal with him." [Source: Washington
Post]
May 24, 2002
-- The six members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who are the
highest ranking members of the U.S. armed forces, publicly
criticize the president's desire for a swift strike against
Iraq. The military commanders express fears that an early
invasion would result in many American casualties, and that
a cornered Saddam Hussein would not hesitate to use
biological or chemical weapons. [Source: London
Telegraph]
July 9, 2002 -- Bush tells reporters,
"It is the stated policy of this government to have a regime
change [in Iraq], and we'll use all the tools at our
disposal to do so." [Source: Associated Press]
July - September 2002
-- On numerous occasions, former U.N. Iraqi weapons
inspector Scott Ritter criticizes the Bush Administration
for its Iraq policy. Ritter maintains that Saddam's military
capability is negligible and Bush wants to invade Iraq for
political purposes. [Sources: CNN, Washington Post, New
York Times]
Aug. 18, 2002
-- Richard Perle is quoted in a Washington Post story by
political reporter Dana Milbank headlined, "White House Push
for Iraqi Strike Is on Hold." The subhead reads, "Waiting to
Make Case for Action Allows Invasion Opponents to Dominate
Debate." Perle says, "Timing is everything when you do this.
If you launched [a public campaign] too far in advance and
nothing followed, that would raise questions and fuel a
debate that would not be helpful to the administration...If
you join the debate now, but don't act for months, you pay a
worse price."
Sept. 8, 2002 --
The United Kingdom's Independent reports "more than 100 U.S.
and British aircraft attacked Iraqi air installations last
week in the biggest raid for more than three years."
[Source: The Independent (U.K.)]
September 12, 2002 -- Bush tells UN that
Iraq is a "grave and gathering danger" and that the US "will
not allow any terrorist or tyrant to threaten civilisation
with weapons of mass murder".
Sept. 13, 2002
-- Reps. Jim McDermott, D-Wash., and Dennis Kucinich,
D-Ohio, declare Saddam's efforts to amass weapons of mass
destruction pose no immediate threat to the U.S., and Bush'
real motive for a military strike is to make a grab for
Iraqi oil. "Oil is a factor. How much [of a factor] is
anybody's guess, but to discount it as a factor is, I think,
misleading," said Kucinich. "It's not a conspiracy theory to
bring it in because, after all, it is the second largest oil
supply in the world." [Source: CNN]
Sept. 16, 2002
-- Nelson Mandela increases his verbal offensive against the
Bush Administration hawks. "What right has Bush to say that
Iraq's offer is not genuine?" asked Mandela. "We must
condemn that very strongly. No country, however strong, is
entitled to comment adversely in the way the U.S. has done.
They think they're the only power in the world. They're not
and they're following a dangerous policy. One country wants
to bully the world." [Source: BBC]
Sept. 19, 2002 --
President Bush submits a draft of a congressional resolution
authorizing him to take military action against Iraq. Senate
Majority Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D., predicts Congress will
vote on the resolution before November elections. The draft
resolution says, "The president is authorized to use all
means that he determines to be appropriate, including force,
in order to enforce the United Nations Security Council
resolutions [pertaining to Iraq], defend the national
security interests of the United States against the threat
posed by Iraq, and restore international peace and security
in the region." [Source: Washington Post]
Sept. 24, 2002
-- Tony Blair unveils a dossier of evidence on Saddam
Hussein's possession of weapons of mass destruction. The
dossier, based on British and U.S. intelligence, was
criticized for not revealing convincing evidence pointing to
the need for Saddam's immediate removal. [Source:
Associated Press]
Sept. 27, 2002
-- The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) announces
that the Bush Administration cited a non-existent report
said to be from 1998 on Iraq's supposed imminent nuclear
capability. "There's never been a report like that issued
from this agency," said Mark Gwozdecky, an IAEA spokesman.
[Source: Washington Times]
Sept. 28, 2002
-- Up to 400,000 protesters march against war in Iraq in
central London.
Oct. 1, 2002 (Time approximate 12:00
EDT) - In Vienna, Hans Blix, the head U.N. weapons
inspector, announces a tentative agreement with Iraq to
allow inspectors to return beginning in two weeks. Search
protocols of Hussein's Presidential palaces remain
unresolved. Source: Washington Post]
Oct. 1, 2002
(Time approximate 16:30 EDT) -- Within hours of the Blix
announcement President Bush reacts negatively to the
agreement reached between Iraq and weapons inspectors.
"We're just not going to accept something that is weak," he
said. Bush urges the U.N. to "put some calcium in the
backbone" of an alternative resolution for dealing with
Iraq. On an alternative congressional resolution drafted by
Senators Biden and Lugar of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, Bush says, "I don't want a resolution that ties
my hands...What I won't accept is something that allows
Saddam Hussein to continue to lie, deceive the world," Bush
said. "I'm just not going to accept something that is weak.
It's not worth it - the United Nations must show its
backbone and we'll work with members of the Security Council
to put a little calcium there, put some calcium in the
backbone, so this organization is more likely to keep the
peace as we go down the road." [Sources: Washington
Post, Associated Press]
For a detailed look
at WW3 statistics, including the running cost of World War
Three, the number of lives lost and the countries involved
in World War Three, please see our
World War Overview.
Further details will be added as events dictate.
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